Picking targets at random
“In a year and a half of the war, we’ve seen several periods when the territory of Ukraine was being shelled with cruise and ballistic missiles,” Israeli military expert David Sharp tells Novaya-Europe.
“The large-scale phase of this war started with massive attacks on many Ukrainian cities. We saw the attempts to destroy airfields and other military facilities, suppress air defence systems. Last autumn and winter, they purposefully targeted energy infrastructure facilities. It’s obvious that there was a goal to completely or partially shut off power in the country, driving it to capitulation,” he explains.
“When they didn’t manage to do that, they started saving the missiles for the expected Ukrainian counteroffensive,” Sharp says.
At times, Russia used military intelligence to strike targets: this is what likely happened in the frontline city of Kramatorsk, the expert notes. The strike on a local pizzeria killed 13 and injured 60. “There were teenagers among the victims. This is a specific example of violating the rules of war,” Sharp stresses. “Furthermore, Russia’s version of events — eliminating two generals and a high number of senior officers and advisers with Ukraine’s Armed Forces during the attack — doesn’t hold up at all.”
However, in some cases, Russia is targeting locations at random, attacking Kherson, Nikopol, and other cities, with multiple rocket launchers, Sharp says.
Based on open-source data, foreign volunteers who support Ukraine’s Armed Forces could have been in the Kramatorsk pizzeria during the missile strike. Marine Corps veteran Ian “Frank” Tortorici was reportedly killed there. But this does not make the attack on a cafe with civilians inside any less of a war crime.